Pathophysiology

Study the disordered physiological processes associated with disease or injury. Bridge the gap between basic sciences and clinical practice by understanding how diseases alter normal function.

9 courses

Molecular and Cellular Pathophysiology: Infection, Inflammation, and Cancer

Learn how tissues and organs respond to disease at the molecular level, bridging the gap between immunology, chronic inflammation, and cancer biology.

Introduction to Human Pathology and Disease Mechanisms

Understand the cellular mechanisms of disease and modern diagnostic methods to build a solid foundation in human pathology.

Tumor Pathophysiology and Transport Phenomena

Master the physical forces and biological barriers shaping tumor growth, microenvironments, and drug delivery using quantitative engineering principles.

Pathophysiology Essentials: Understanding Disease Mechanisms

Master the foundational biological mechanisms of human disease to prepare for clinical coursework and careers in nursing, medicine, and allied health.

Understanding Cardiovascular Disease: Pathophysiology and Prevention

Learn the biological mechanisms behind heart disease and explore evidence-based clinical interventions and lifestyle modifications to support long-term cardiovascular health.

Foundations of Pathophysiology: How Disease Affects the Human Body

Understand how physiological disruptions lead to common disease states across major organ systems in this beginner-friendly written guide.

Foundations of Pathophysiology: Mechanisms of Disease

Understand the cellular and systemic mechanisms that underlie disease, bridging basic science and clinical reasoning.

Pathophysiology Study Workbook: Mechanism Maps and Disease Case Mapping

Build a study workbook covering mechanism maps for major disease processes and structured case mapping that links mechanism to clinical presentation.

Applied Pathophysiology: Clinical Reasoning Across Systems

Apply pathophysiological reasoning to clinical cases across cardiovascular, respiratory, gastrointestinal, renal, and endocrine systems.